WO2010118709A2 - Procédé de production de lignées cellulaires en croissance adhérente synchronisée et dispositif pour la mise en oeuvre dudit procédé - Google Patents

Procédé de production de lignées cellulaires en croissance adhérente synchronisée et dispositif pour la mise en oeuvre dudit procédé Download PDF

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WO2010118709A2
WO2010118709A2 PCT/CZ2010/000043 CZ2010000043W WO2010118709A2 WO 2010118709 A2 WO2010118709 A2 WO 2010118709A2 CZ 2010000043 W CZ2010000043 W CZ 2010000043W WO 2010118709 A2 WO2010118709 A2 WO 2010118709A2
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cells
cell
culture
synchronized
movable platform
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PCT/CZ2010/000043
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WO2010118709A3 (fr
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Martin Mistrik
Jiri Bartek
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Univerzita Palackeho
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Priority claimed from CZ20090236A external-priority patent/CZ302682B6/cs
Priority claimed from CZ200921114U external-priority patent/CZ19628U1/cs
Application filed by Univerzita Palackeho filed Critical Univerzita Palackeho
Priority to EP20100730692 priority Critical patent/EP2419503B1/fr
Publication of WO2010118709A2 publication Critical patent/WO2010118709A2/fr
Publication of WO2010118709A3 publication Critical patent/WO2010118709A3/fr

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M23/00Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
    • C12M23/02Form or structure of the vessel
    • C12M23/08Flask, bottle or test tube
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M23/00Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
    • C12M23/46Means for fastening
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M27/00Means for mixing, agitating or circulating fluids in the vessel
    • C12M27/16Vibrating; Shaking; Tilting
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M33/00Means for introduction, transport, positioning, extraction, harvesting, peeling or sampling of biological material in or from the apparatus
    • C12M33/08Means for introduction, transport, positioning, extraction, harvesting, peeling or sampling of biological material in or from the apparatus by vibration

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a new method of production of synchronized adherently growing cell lines that can be used especially in ' laboratories for basic and applied research, and it also describes construction of a device for carrying out said method.
  • Cell line growing techniques are an integral part of work for many biological, biotechnological and medical laboratories for basic and applied research. Cell lines are used for drug and chemical screening, for production of bio products and, last but not least, for the basic research and study of diseases including cancer, degenerative diseases, aging etc.
  • One of the integral aspects of the cell population growth is the asynchronicity of the individual cells, which means that the cells go through the stages of the cell cycle at different pace and are thence forming a heterogeneous population of cells in various phases of the growth cycle. This heterogeneity of the cell population represents a serious problem for most experimental procedures because cells in different phases of the cell cycle have different physical, physiological, biochemical and genetic properties.
  • Initiation methods are synchronization methods which use chemicals such as replication inhibitors or mitotic inhibitors, or change in the culture medium, such as serum deficiency, hormonal insufficiency or lack of growth factors, to initiate arrestation of cell proliferation in a certain phase of the cell cycle.
  • Initiation methods are synchronization methods which use chemicals such as replication inhibitors or mitotic inhibitors, or change in the culture medium, such as serum deficiency, hormonal insufficiency or lack of growth factors, to initiate arrestation of cell proliferation in a certain phase of the cell cycle.
  • they usually employ a stress stimulus which activates pathways blocking further proliferation. The proliferation is usually arrested until the stress signal subsides by, e.g., washing out the inhibitor or suppling the serum, in some cases the proliferation inhibition is permanent.
  • Cell synchronization method on the basis of replication inhibitors uses mostly compounds such as hydroxyurea, thymidine and aphidicolin, as described, e.g., in Deborah S. Parr is and Robert C. Bates: Synchronization of primary fetal cell cultures with hydroxyurea (1978, Methods in Cell Science 4, 745-747), Whitmore,G.F. and GuIy as, S.: Synchronization of mammalian cells with tritiated thymidine (1966, Science 151, 691-694) or Fox, M. K, et al: Comparison of synchronized Chinese hamster ovary cells obtained by mitotic shake-off hydroxyurea, aphidicolin, or methotrexate.
  • Kurose.A., et al Effects of hydroxyurea and aphidicolin on phosphorylation of ataxia telangiectasia mutated on Ser 1981 and his tone H2AX on Ser 139 in relation to cell cycle phase and induction of apoptosis (2006a, Cytometry A 69, 212-221) or Kurose,A., et al: Synchronization in the cell cycle by inhibitors of DNA replication induces histone H2AX phosphorylation: an indication of DNA damage (2006b, Cell Prolif 39, 231-240).
  • starvation is a stress causing a complex cell response with unpredictable effects. These may interfere with the planned experimental procedure.
  • Many cell lines react to the starvation by initiating autophagocytosis, i.e. the process of obtaining missing compounds by degradation of some of the cell's own organelles, as described in Marie Stampe Ostenfeld: Anti-cancer agent siramesine is a lysosomotropic detergent that induces cytoprotective autophagosome accumulation. (2008, Autophagy), or by immediate initiation of apoptosis, see Lu, C, et al: Serum starvation induces H2AX phosphorylation to regulate apoptosis via p38 MAPK pathway (2008, FEBS Lett. 582, 2703-2708). These lines are therefore completely unsuitable for this method.
  • Cell synchronization by mitotic inhibitor is a method combining initiation and separation.
  • chemicals interacting with tubulin are used. They cause defects in formation, breakdown and regulation of the mitotic spindle. Any problem concerning the mitotic spindle results in a cell stress and the completion of mitosis is blocked by activation of the so-called mitotic checkpoint.
  • the cells arrested in mitosis are usually subsequently separated by using one of the separation techniques described below, mostly by the shaking or washing methods.
  • the mitosis is most frequently blocked by microtubule poisons Colchicine, see Andreu.J.M. and Timasheff,S.N.: Tubulin bound to colchicine forms polymers different from microtubules (1982, Proc.
  • Nocodazole see Lee, J.C., et al : Effects of nocodazole on structures of calf brain tubulin (1980, Biochemistry 19, 6209-6215) or Zieve,G. W., et al: Production of large numbers of mitotic mammalian cells by use of the reversible microtubule inhibitor nocodazole. Nocodazole accumulated mitotic cells (1980, Exp. Cell Res.
  • the advantage of this method is that it is not technologically and economically demanding and if the separation step is added, the acquired cell fraction is very homogeneous with all the cells in the mitotic metaphase.
  • the disadvantage of this method is that all mitotic inhibitors are highly toxic substances and their use affects not only the microtubuli of the mitotic spindle but also all other tubular structures of the cell, i.e., cytoskeleton and nucleoskeleton.
  • the negative effects of the microtubule poisons are especially nuclear fragmentation, dispersal of Golgi apparatus and metabolic changes, as described in Minin, A. A.: Dispersal of Golgi apparatus in nocodazole- treated fibroblasts is a kinesin-driven process (1997, J.
  • Microtubule poisons are proved to be mutagens initiating irreversible genetic changes and a frequent cell response to their application is apoptosis and/or cessation of further cell proliferation, as described in Davoodpour,P. and Landstrom,M. : 2-Methoxyestradiol-induced apoptosis in prostate cancer cells requires Smad7 (2005, J. Biol. Chem. 280, 14773-14779), Fox,M.K, et al: Comparison of synchronized Chinese hamster ovary cells obtained by mitotic shake- off, hydroxyurea, aphidicolin, or methotrexate.
  • the mitotic fraction therefore forms only a part of the total cell population and the collected cell fraction represents about 25-34 %, as described in Zieve.G. W., et a Production of large numbers of mitotic mammalian cells by use of the reversible -microtubule inhibitor nocodazole. Nocodazole accumulated mitotic cells (1980, Exp. Cell Res. 126, 397- 405).
  • Separation methods use differences between the cells in particular phases of the cell cycle. These differences can be physical, when the size depends on the amount of DNA, biochemical, when the surface markers are examined, or physiological involving the examination of the cell adhesion to the cell culture substrate.
  • the easiest method of this kind is the separation by mitotic shake-off or wash-out, taking advantage of the fact that at a certain phase of the cell cycle, the mitotic cells are poorly adhered to the culture substrate, as described e.g. in Terasima, T. and Tolmach,L.J.: Growth and nucleic acid synthesis in synchronously dividing populations of HeLa cells (1963, Exp. Cell Res. 30, 344-362). Mitotic cells of most mammal cell lines can thus be separated using fundamental physical forces like washing out by a stream of fluid as described, e.g., in the document US 2002/0123144, or by shaking the culture plate using rolling (US 3871955) or vibrating (EP 1 284 285) motion.
  • the advantage of this method is, that it is the only separation method that does not necessarily need any special equipment consisting of complicated and expensive instruments.
  • This method primarily does not require usage of synchronization chemicals, even though the accumulation of mitotic cells is in that case very low, and therefore represents the least stressful method for the cells.
  • the process of separation can be performed in an aseptic box, which decreases the contamination risk.
  • the disadvantage is the aforementioned little accumulation of mitotic fraction, as the mitotic cells form only 1-3 % of a normal exponentially growing cell population and not all are successfully separated.
  • this method is often combined with a method using the mitotic inhibitors, i.e., using the microtubule poisons, which - as mentioned above - are highly toxic.
  • the method can also be combined with storing every shaken-off or washed-out mitotic fraction on ice and after reaching a sufficient number of cells, the cultivation is transferred to normal culture conditions, as described in Fox, M- H. : Methods for Synchronizing Mammalian Cells (2004, In Cell Cycle Checkpoint Control Protocols). This allows for a possibility to avoid toxic mitotic inhibitors to gain higher amount of mitotic cells, but the technological intensity of the procedure increases significantly and physiological problems connected to the thermal shock may also arise.
  • Separation using counterflow centrifugal elutriation is based on different sizes of the cells. It is primarily determined by the size of the nucleus, which forms most of the cell's volume and its size reflects the phase of the cell cycle. It is possible to separate the cells according to their size in a special cell chamber using the combination of centrifugal force and force in the opposite direction produced by the flowing fluid.
  • the procedure uses a special instrument, the so-called "Elutriator” described in Chang,Q., et al: Counterflow centrifugal elutriation as a method of T cell depletion may cause loss of immature CD34+ cells (1997, Bone Marrow Transplant.
  • the acquired fractions are not completely homogeneous because the size of the cell does not precisely determine the phase of the cell cycle.
  • the cells are exposed to non-physiological stress conditions, when adherent cell cultures must be transformed into suspension, the elutriation medium contains N,N,N',N'- ethylendiamintetraacetic acid (EDTA), the cells are exposed to fluctuation of temperature and additional stress factor can be also the amount of dissolved gases in the elutriation medium.
  • EDTA N,N,N',N'- ethylendiamintetraacetic acid
  • Another separation method is based on flow cytometry, interpreting the fluorescent signal from the individual cells on a special instrument - FACS, which can be supplemented by a sorting instrument, i.e., cell separator, as described in article RiesebergM., et al : Flow cytometry in biotechnology (2001, Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 56, 350-360).
  • a sorting instrument i.e., cell separator
  • Fluorescent dyeing exists in a form of direct chemical dyeing, intermediated dyeing using antibodies with conjugated fluorescent marker or by artificially inserted genes coding the fluorescent proteins.
  • the advantage of this method is that it is a relatively fast and precise method of cell population separation allowing more than one selection criterion.
  • the disadvantage is the high purchase price, very complicated operation and maintenance of the instrument and also high prices of fluorescent dyes.
  • fluorescent DNA dyeing is necessary, which can have mutagenic effect.
  • cells are exposed to intensive laser light that can initiate production of toxic photoproducts.
  • the cells are exposed to non-physiological stress conditions, when adherent cell cultures must be transferred into suspension culture before sorting, the sorting medium includes EDTA, and cells are exposed to fluctuation of temperature and non-physiological amount of dissolved gases. During the procedure itself, risk of bacterial or yeast contamination of the cell culture is increased.
  • the invention aims at eliminating the negative effects of the commonly used synchronization methods and at the same time decreasing the financial, time and operational intensity of this important laboratory procedure, while using the principle of anchorage dependence. It is defined as the proliferation's need of anchorage, i.e., adhesion, to the culture substrate and its description can be found e.g. in Assoian,R.K. and Zhu,X.: Cell anchorage and the cytoskeleton as partners in growth factor dependent cell cycle progression (1997, Curr. Opin. Cell Biol.
  • the aforementioned aim is achieved by the provision of a method for production of a synchronized adherently growing cell line, the subject matter of which consists in subjecting a culture bottle with culture medium containing adherently growing cell line to vibration under standard cultivation conditions in an incubator.
  • the vibration causes the washout of the poorly adhering mitotic cells to the culture medium and initiates inhibition of their proliferation.
  • the washed-out cell fraction suspension is removed and transferred to a new culture bottle or taken for analysis.
  • synchronized adherently growing cell line denotes cells of an adherent cell line, which are all in the same phase (or stage) of the cell cycle.
  • cell line covers herein immortal cell lines, cell strains and primary cultures of adherent cells.
  • the standard cultivation conditions are well known to those skilled in the art. Commonly they are 37 0 C, 5% CO 2 , 100% humidity.
  • the novelty and inventiveness of the present invention consists in the fact that when culture surface is removed during mitosis in the metaphase stage, the unanchored adherently growing cell will proceed in mitosis only until karyokinesis, i.e. until nuclear segmentation, and the following cytokinesis, i.e. the final cell division into two daughter cells, will not occur. The cells then remain in the stage of incomplete cytokinesis or, in other words, in late telophase. Further proliferation of these cells is stopped until the cells are once again anchored on the culture surface.
  • the present invention thus provides for induced synchronization of cells in late telophase which occurs as a result of the change of the culture conditions.
  • the vibration is defined by the frequency in the range of from 1 to 100 Hz (vibrations per second), more preferably in the range of from 1 to 50 Hz, most preferably in the range of from 5 to 40 Hz and by the amplitude in the range of from 0.001 to 30 mm, more preferably in the range of from 0.1 to 10 mm.
  • the culture bottle should be subjected to the vibrational treatment for a period of time that is sufficient for at least some cells to reach the metaphase stage, during which they are removed from the bottle inner surface by the action of vibrations.
  • the period of time of the vibrational treatment should be selected so that a significant or a desired proportion of the cells is removed from the bottle inner surface, but they do not develop stress for not being able to adhere to the bottle inner surface to continue their cell cycle.
  • the culture bottle is subjected to the vibrational treatment for a period of time of from 1 to 30 hours, more preferably in the range of from 4 to 24 hours, most preferably in the range of from 6 to 18 hours.
  • an inert abrasive which makes the washing out of the mitotic cells easier, can be added into the medium before starting the vibrational treatment.
  • the inert abrasive may be, e.g., sterilized agarose.
  • Another object of the invention is a device for carrying out the method of production of synchronized adherently growing cell lines seeded in culture bottles with culture medium.
  • the device comprises a movable platform, which is flexibly mounted on a stationary support structure, provided with attachment means for attaching the culture bottle, and connected to a vibrator.
  • the vibrator is connected by a cable to a vibration regulator embedded in a box.
  • the box preferably holds an energy supply and is a part of the support structure or is firmly connected with the support structure.
  • the energy supply is preferably a battery power supply.
  • the platform can be flexibly mounted by using elastic brackets made of an elastomeric material, or spiral springs mounted on antipodal hinges.
  • the attachment means can be any means suitable for firmly attaching the cultivation bottle to the movable platform, so that the cultivation bottle remains attached to the movable platform during the vibrational treatment.
  • the attachment means can be fixtures or fittings, particularly elastic strips.
  • the advantage of the present invention consists in the fact that it does not use any synchronization chemicals and does not change the chemical composition of the culture medium, but it allows for achieving large proportions of synchronized cells. Cells synchronized using this method do not show any measurable signs of stress and allow for a subsequent long-term cultivation. Easy applicability and automation of the method is also an important factor.
  • the invention further includes an easily manufacturable device for carrying out the method of the invention, which provides for accumulation of a relatively big amount of chemically non-affected synchronized cells with minimum operational costs and zero demands for additional laboratory equipment. It is a compact module, which due to its size and technical realization can be placed into a standard cell incubator.
  • the battery power supply enables a long operation inside the incubator under standard cultivation conditions without the need for intervention for a long enough period and the fitting of the device does not require any special technological modifications of the incubator or any change in the culture regime.
  • the device uses mechanical forces acting on the cells significantly stronger in comparison with the so far used bacterial and suspension cells shakers, which means that both the wash-out of the uninhibited mitotic cells into suspension and initiation of inhibition of their proliferation occurs, and therefore the cells are arrested in late telophase.
  • Fig. 1 is a schematic view of a synchronization device with a standard cultivation bottle attached
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic representation of one of the possible variants of a vibrator in the form of a contactless unbalanced motor
  • Fig. 3 shows a comparison of population profiles (FACS profiles) of a normally growing cell population (chart A) and a population acquired by 18-hour cultivation shake-off using the instrument from Fig.l (chart B) and
  • Fig. 4 shows the microscopic analysis of a cell population acquired by 24-hour cultivation using the instrument from Fig. 1 , with most of the cells in late telophase, i.e. with 2 daughter nuclei,
  • Fig. 5 shows a photograph of a microscopic field depicting the visual analysis of different stages of mitosis in cells obtained by 6-hour cultivation shake-off using the instrument shown in Fig. 1 with emphasis on defective anaphases typical for cancer cell lines as represented by detail of anaphase cell with a bridge structure.
  • the synchronization device depicted in Fig. 1 consists of a movable platform i, which is by means of elastic brackets 2 flexibly mounted on a stationary support structure 3.
  • the elastic brackets 2 in this embodiment consist from spiral strings 2_1_ mounted on antipodal hinges 22.
  • the platform I is provided with attachment means H), which are two elastic strips for securing the culture bottle 4 with culture medium 4_i on the upper surface JJ . of the platform I.
  • the vibrator 5 shown in more detail in Fig. 2, is electromechanical, consisting from a contactless motor 5J . with an unbalanced rotor 52.
  • the vibrator 5 is battery powered 9, for example by lead gel battery stored in the box 8 equipped with connectors for charging.
  • the vibration regulator 7 is therefore actually a regulator engine speed governor 5JL
  • the culture bottle 4 with culture medium 4J_ containing exponentially growing adherent cell line is attached to the movable platform i of the instrument using the attachment means 10 and the instrument is placed into an incubator. Subsequently, it is turned on, and adequate mechanical forces acting on cells are set by setting a suitable vibration frequency and amplitude and the cells are being incubated under standard cultivation conditions and constant vibrations for a predetermined period of time. After the pre-determined period of time, the washed-out cell fraction is removed and transferred to a new culture bottle or a plate or directly processed for analysis.
  • an inert abrasive which makes the washing out of the mitotic cells easier, can be added into the medium before starting the vibrational treatment.
  • Adherently growing human cell line U-2-OS (osteosarcoma) of 9x10 5 cells was placed in a standard culture bottle T75 (cultivation surface area 75 cm 2 ) and cultivated in standard culture medium consisting of DMEM 90 % and fetal bovine serum 10 % under standard cultivation conditions i.e., humidity 100 %, temperature 37 °C, CO 2 5 % for 24 hours. Subsequently, the medium was replaced by a new one and the culture bottle was attached to the movable platform of the device described in Example 1, and the device with the bottle was placed into a standard Heraeus BB 16 culture incubator under a standard cultivation regime, i.e., humidity 100 %, temperature 37 °C, CO 2 5 %.
  • the vibration mode of the device was manually activated and set to 30 vibrations per second and maximum amplitude 10 mm.
  • the medium with the washed-out cells was removed.
  • a part of the cell suspension was concentrated by 10-minute centrifugation at 500 g and immediately fixed by ethanol 70 %, stained for DNA content by propidium iodide and subsequently processed for FACS analysis, the result of which is shown in Fig. 3, chart B.
  • the remaining part of the cell suspension was divided into four new cultivation Petri dishes and was left to incubate under standard cultivation conditions. The individual dishes were then removed after 4, 6, 9 and 15 hours and processed for FACS analysis to monitor the cell cycle progress.
  • Shorter incubation times within 1-8 hours on the devices yield less synchronized cells washed into the suspension but generally lower the stress and are leading to higher content of cells in earlier stages of mitosis than described in example 2, employing 18-hour cultivation, where most of the cells in the suspension are represented by the telophase cells.
  • shorter incubation times on the device can be particularly useful for qualitative and quantitative analysis of different stages of mitosis.
  • anaphase bridges defective structures typical for cancer cell lines.
  • Adherently growing human cell line U-2-OS (osteosarcoma) of 2x10 6 cells was placed in a standard culture bottle Tl 50 (cultivation surface area 150cm 2 ) and cultivated in standard culture medium consisting of DMEM 90 % and fetal bovine serum 10 % under standard cultivation conditions i.e., humidity 100 %, temperature 37 °C, CO 2 5 % for 24 hours. Subsequently, the medium was replaced by a new one and the culture bottle was attached to the movable platform of the device described in Example 1, and the device with the bottle was placed into a standard Heraeus BB 16 culture incubator under a standard cultivation regime, i.e., humidity 100 %, temperature 37 °C, CO 2 5 %.
  • the vibration mode of the device was manually activated and set to 30 vibrations per second and maximum amplitude 10 mm.
  • the medium with the washed- out cells was removed.
  • the cell suspension was concentrated by 10-minute centrifugation at 500g and immediately fixed by ethanol 70 %, stained for DNA content by propidium iodide.
  • Cells were fixed on a microscopic slide and examined using fluorescent microscope for visual assessment of cells in different stages of mitosis (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase) representing the majority of the obtained cell population. Photograph of a microscopic field depicting the analysis and a detail of a cell with defective anaphase represented by anaphase bridge structure is shown in Fig. 5.
  • the medium was replaced by a new one and the culture bottle was attached to the movable platform of the device described in Example 1 and the device with the bottle was placed into a standard Heraeus BB 16 culture incubator under standard cultivation regime, i.e. humidity 100%, temperature 37 °C, CO 2 5%.
  • the vibration mode of the device was manually activated and set to 30 vibrations per second and maximum amplitude 10mm.
  • the medium with the washed-out cells was removed.
  • the cell suspension was divided into four new cultivation Petri dishes. One of the dishes carried out the control function and to the three other Petri dishes final concentration 0.1 , 0.2 and 0.4 ⁇ M of Aphidicolin was added.
  • the dishes were then cultivated under standard cultivation conditions. After 18 hours, the dishes were regularly controlled every hour under inversed microscope and the total number of rounded, i.e. mitotic, cells was recorded. When the rate of the mitotic cells in a certain dish reached approximately ten per cent, the dish was taken out to be examined for mitotic chromosome breakage by a standard procedure described for example in article Margaret A.Leversha, (1998, In Cell Biology: A Laboratory Handbook, Julio E.Celis, Ed. (ACADEMIC PRESS, San Diego), chapter 11, pp. 428-436).
  • Adherently growing human BJ cell line (foreskin fibroblasts) of 10x10 5 cells was placed in a standard culture bottle T75 (cultivation surface area 75cm 2 ) and cultivated in standard culture medium consisting of DMEM 90% and fetal bovine serum 10% under standard culture conditions for 24 hours. Subsequently, the medium was replaced by a new one, 200 mg of sterilized agarose was added to fulfill a function of inert abrasive and make the wash-out of mitotic cells easier.
  • the culture bottle was attached to the movable platform of the device as described in Example 1, and the device with the bottle was placed into a standard Heraeus BB 16 culture incubator under standard cultivation regime, i.e., humidity 100%, temperature 37 °C, CO 2 5%.
  • the vibration mode of the device was manually activated and set to 30 vibrations per second and maximum amplitude 10 mm.
  • the medium with the washed-out cells and agarose was removed. The cell suspension was divided into five new cultivation Petri dishes and left to settle during 3-hour incubation under standard cultivation conditions.

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Abstract

La présente invention a pour objet un procédé pour la production d'une lignée cellulaire en croissance adhérente synchronisée. Un flacon de culture contenant un milieu de culture contenant une lignée cellulaire adhérente est soumis à des vibrations dans des conditions de culture standard dans un incubateur, et après la fin du traitement par vibrations, la suspension de fraction cellulaire éliminée par lavage est éliminée et transférée à un nouveau flacon de culture ou prélevée pour analyse. Les vibrations provoquent l'élimination par lavage des cellules mitotiques adhérant faiblement au milieu de culture et initient l'inhibition de leur prolifération. L'invention concerne en outre un dispositif pour la mise en œuvre dudit procédé, contenant une plateforme mobile (1), montée de manière flexible sur une structure de support fixe (3), ladite plateforme mobile (1) ayant des moyens de fixation (10) et étant connectée à un vibrateur (5), ledit vibrateur étant connecté par un câble (6) à un régulateur de vibration (7) intégré dans une boîte (8), ladite boîte (8) maintenant une alimentation en énergie (9).
PCT/CZ2010/000043 2009-04-16 2010-04-12 Procédé de production de lignées cellulaires en croissance adhérente synchronisée et dispositif pour la mise en oeuvre dudit procédé WO2010118709A2 (fr)

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EP20100730692 EP2419503B1 (fr) 2009-04-16 2010-04-12 Procédé de production de lignées cellulaires en croissance adhérente synchronisée et dispositif pour la mise en oeuvre dudit procédé

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CZ20090236A CZ302682B6 (cs) 2009-04-16 2009-04-16 Zpusob produkce synchronizovaných adherentne rostoucích bunecných linií a prístroj pro provádení tohoto zpusobu
CZPUV2009-21114 2009-04-16
CZPV2009-236 2009-04-16
CZ200921114U CZ19628U1 (cs) 2009-04-16 2009-04-16 Přístroj k zajišťování produkce synchronizovaných adherentně rostoucích buněčných linií

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WO2010118709A2 true WO2010118709A2 (fr) 2010-10-21
WO2010118709A3 WO2010118709A3 (fr) 2010-12-23

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CZ302682B6 (cs) * 2009-04-16 2011-08-31 Univerzita Palackého Zpusob produkce synchronizovaných adherentne rostoucích bunecných linií a prístroj pro provádení tohoto zpusobu
DE102012015999A1 (de) * 2012-05-05 2013-11-07 Karsten Baumann Schwingkörper als Untersetzer für Petrischalen
EP2933324A4 (fr) * 2012-12-12 2016-08-24 Kawasaki Heavy Ind Ltd Dispositif de détachement de cellules
DE102015116732A1 (de) * 2015-10-02 2017-04-06 Alireza Rahimi Kompakte Vibrationseinrichtung
CN108913603A (zh) * 2018-09-26 2018-11-30 天津市康婷生物工程有限公司 一种可回收多层培养且防污染的贴壁细胞培养装置
US10323224B2 (en) 2014-02-10 2019-06-18 Alireza Rahimi Vibration device for petri dishes

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CZ302682B6 (cs) * 2009-04-16 2011-08-31 Univerzita Palackého Zpusob produkce synchronizovaných adherentne rostoucích bunecných linií a prístroj pro provádení tohoto zpusobu
DE102012015999A1 (de) * 2012-05-05 2013-11-07 Karsten Baumann Schwingkörper als Untersetzer für Petrischalen
EP2933324A4 (fr) * 2012-12-12 2016-08-24 Kawasaki Heavy Ind Ltd Dispositif de détachement de cellules
US10323224B2 (en) 2014-02-10 2019-06-18 Alireza Rahimi Vibration device for petri dishes
DE102015116732A1 (de) * 2015-10-02 2017-04-06 Alireza Rahimi Kompakte Vibrationseinrichtung
DE102015116732B4 (de) 2015-10-02 2023-11-23 Alireza Rahimi Kompakte Vibrationseinrichtung
CN108913603A (zh) * 2018-09-26 2018-11-30 天津市康婷生物工程有限公司 一种可回收多层培养且防污染的贴壁细胞培养装置

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